- Spoils system
In the
politics of the United States , a spoils system is an informal practice where a political party, after winning an election, gives government jobs to its voters as a reward for working toward victory, and as an incentive to keep working for the party—as opposed to a system of awarding offices on the basis of some measure of merit independent of political activity.The term was derived from the phrase "'to the victor go the spoils"."
Similar spoils systems are common in other nations that are struggling to transcend systemic clientage based on tribal organization or other
kinship group s andlocalism in general.Beginnings
After
Andrew Jackson became President in 1828, he systematically rewarded his supporters by starting theSecond Party System . He considered that popular election gave the victorious party a "mandate" to select officials from its own ranks. This is the credo of republicanism.Peak and Reform
Presidents after Jackson continued the use of the spoils system.
Abraham Lincoln used the system effectively to support both his Republican party and the Union war effort. But by the late 1860s, reformers began demanding a civil service system. Running asLiberal Republican s in 1872, they were harshly defeated by patronage-hungryUlysses S. Grant .The end of the spoils system at the federal level came with the passage of the
Pendleton Act in 1883, which created a bipartisan Civil Service Commission to evaluate job candidates on a nonpartisan merit basis. While few jobs were covered under the law initially, the law allowed the President to transfer jobs (and their current holders) into the system, thus giving the holder a permanent job. The Pendleton Act's reach was expanded as the two main political parties alternated control of the White House in every election between 1884 and 1896. After each election the outgoing President applied the Pendleton Act to jobs held by his political supporters. By 1900, most federal jobs were handled through civil service and the spoils system was limited only to very senior positions.The separation between political activity and the civil service was made stronger with the Hatch Act which prohibited federal employees from engaging in political activities.
The spoils system survived much longer in many states, counties and municipalities, such as the
Tammany Hall ring, which survived well into the 1930s whenNew York City reformed its own civil service. Illinois modernized its bureaucracy in 1917 underFrank Lowden , butChicago held on to patronage in city government until the city agreed to end the practice in theShakman Decrees of 1972 and 1983.References
* Griffith; Ernest S. "The Modern Development of City Government in the United Kingdom and the United States" (1927)
* Hoogenboom, Ari Arthur. "Outlawing the Spoils: A history of the civil service reform movement, 1865-1883" (1961)
* Ostrogorski; M. "Democracy and the Party System in the United States" (1910)
* Rubio; Philip F. "A History of Affirmative Action, 1619-2000" University Press of Mississippi, 2001ee also
*
List of United States political appointments that crossed party lines
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